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This allows drivers and devices outside of the mainline kernel to continue working after a Linux kernel upgrade. [3] Another benefit of DKMS is that it allows the installation of a new driver on an existing system, running an arbitrary kernel version, without any need for manual compilation or precompiled packages provided by the vendor.
In the 2.6-series of the Linux Kernel, the LVM is implemented in terms of the device mapper, a simple block-level scheme for creating virtual block devices and mapping their contents onto other block devices. This minimizes the amount of relatively hard-to-debug kernel code needed to implement the LVM.
It is based on Debian Bullseye (11.1) with Linux kernel 5.10. Devuan 5.0 Daedalus was released on August 15, 2023. It is based on Debian Bookworm (12.1) with Linux kernel 6.1. The current testing suite with code name Excalibur is planned for 2025+. It is based on Debian Trixie (13) with Linux kernel 6.10.
Debian 12 (Bookworm) is the last version of Debian with KDE Plasma 5. Starting with Debian 12, non-free firmware packages from the "non-free-firmware" section of the Debian archive was enabled by default in the official installer and live images if and when the system determines that these packages are required, such as with modern Wi-Fi cards ...
8th LTS release, used in Ubuntu 12.04 LTS [292] and optionally in 12.04 ESM, [293] Debian 7 "Wheezy" and Slackware 14.0. [1] [290] Canonical promised to (at least) provide long-term support until April 2017; [194] Support has continued for months after. 3.2 to 3.5 was named Saber-toothed Squirrel [294] 3.1 24 October 2011 [295]
The majority of software in Debian GNU/kFreeBSD was built from the same sources as Debian, with some kernel packages from FreeBSD. The k in kFreeBSD is an abbreviation for kernel, which refers to the FreeBSD kernel. Before discontinuing the project, Debian maintained i386 and amd64 ports.
The Linux kernel has supported UAS since 8 June 2014 when the version 3.15 was released. [18] However, some distributions of Linux such as Ubuntu (from v11.xx onwards) have reported issues with some misbehaving hardware. [19] The kernel has a built-in blocklist for devices with "quirks" defined in unusual_uas.h. [20]
This disallows a root user to load arbitrary code via kexec and execute it, complementing the UEFI secure boot and in-kernel security mechanisms for ensuring that only signed Linux kernel modules can be inserted into the running kernel. [4] [5] [6] Kexec is used by LinuxBoot to boot the main kernel from the Linux kernel located in the firmware.